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Encyclopedia > Zacatecas (state)


Zacatecas is the name of a city and a state in Mexico. This article is about the state. For the city, see: Zacatecas.


ESTADO DE ZACATECAS
Image:ZacatecasState.png
Other Mexican States
Capital Zacatecas
Other major cities Fresnillo
Area 73,252 km²
Ranked 10th
Population
(2000 census)
1,351,200
Ranked 25th
Governor
(2004-2010)
Amalia García Medina (PRD)
Federal Deputies (5) PRD = 5
Federal Senators PRI = 2
PRD = 1
ISO 3166-2
Postal abbr.
MX-ZAC
Zac.

Zacatecas is one of the 31 constituent states of Mexico. It is bounded to the north by Durango and Coahuila, to the east by San Luis Potosí, to the south by Aguascalientes and Jalisco, and to the west by Jalisco and Durango.


The state shares its name with its capital and chief center of population, the city of Zacatecas.


The state of Zacatecas had an estimated 1,375,000 inhabitants in 2003. (In 1900 it had 462,190 people.)


Zacatecas is located in the great central plateau of Mexico, with an average elevation of about 7700 feet. The state is somewhat mountainous, being traversed in the west by lateral ranges of the Sierra Madre Occidental, and by numerous isolated ranges in other parts – Mazapil, Norillos, Guadalupe and others. There are no large rivers, only the small head-streams of the Aguanaval in the north, and of the Guazamota, Bolanos and Juchipila in the west, the last three being tributaries of the Rio Grande de Santiago.


As the rainfall is light this lack of streams suitable for irrigation is a drawback to agriculture. The climate is dry and generally healthy, being warm in the valleys and temperate in the mountains.


The agricultural products are cereals, sugar and maguey, the first being dependent on the rainfall, often failing altogether, the second on irrigation in the lower valleys, and the latter doing best in a dry climate on a calcareous soil with water not far beneath the surface. There is also a considerable production of peaches, apricots and grapes, the last being made into wine. A few cattle are raised, and considerable attention is given to the rearing of sheep, goats and swine. A natural product is guayule, a shrub from which rubber is extracted.


The chief industry of Zacatecas, however, is mining for silver, gold, mercury, copper, iron, zinc, lead, bismuth, antimony and salt. Its mineral wealth was discovered soon after the conquest, and some of its mines are among the most famous of Mexico, dating from 1546. One of the most productive of its silver mines, the Alvarado, has records which show a production of nearly $800,000,000 in silver between 1548 and 1867.


The state is traversed by the Mexican Central and the Mexican National railways. Its manufactures are limited chiefly to the reduction of mineral ores, the extraction of rubber from guayule, the making of sugar, rum, mezcal, pulque, woollen and cotton fabrics, and some minor industries of the capital.


In addition to the capital at Zacatecas, other principal cities include Sombrerete pop. 10,000 (1900), an important silver-mining town 121 Km (70m.) N.W. of the capital (elev. 8430 ft); Ciudad García, pop. 9500 (1900); Guadalupe, pop. 9000 (1900); Pinos pop. 8000 (1900), a mining town; San Juan de Mezquital pop. 7000 (1900); Tacoaleche, a town with La Ex Hacienda La Casa Grande and Fresnillo pop. 75,1186 estimated. (1990 est.), an important center for the mining of silver and copper.


Municipalities

  1. Apozol (Apozol)
  2. Apulco (Apulco)
  3. Atolinga (Atolinga)
  4. Benito Juárez (Florencia)
  5. Calera (Víctor Rosales)
  6. Cañitas de Felipe Pescador (Cañitas de Felipe Pescador)
  7. Chalchihuites (Chalchihuites)
  8. Concepción del Oro (Concepción del Oro)
  9. Cuauhtémoc (San Pedro Piedra Gorda)
  10. El Plateado de Joaquín Amaro (El Plateado de Joaquín Amaro)
  11. El Salvador (El Salvador)
  12. Fresnillo (Fresnillo)
  13. Genaro Codina (Genaro Codina)
  14. General Enrique Estrada (General Enrique Estrada)
  15. General Francisco R Murguía (Nieves)
  16. General Pánfilo Natera (General Pánfilo Natera)
  17. Guadalupe (Guadalupe)
  18. Huanusco (Huanusco)
  19. Jalpa (Jalpa)
  20. Jeréz (Jeréz)
  21. Jiménez del Teul (Jiménez del Teul)
  22. Juan Aldama (Juan Aldama)
  23. Juchipila (Juchipila)
  24. Loreto (Loreto)
  25. Luis Moya (Luis Moya)
  26. Mazapil (Mazapil)
  27. Melchor Ocampo (Melchor Ocampo)
  28. Mezquital del Oro (Mezquital del Oro)
  29. Miguel Auza (Miguel Auza)
  30. Momax (Momax)
  31. Monte Escobedo (Monte Escobedo)
  32. Morelos (Morelos)
  33. Moyahua de Estrada (Moyahua de Estrada)
  34. Nochistlán de Mejia (Nochistlán de Mejia)
  35. Noria de Angeles (Noria de Angeles)
  36. Ojocaliente (Ojocaliente)
  37. Pánuco (Pánuco)
  38. Pinos (Pinos)
  39. Río Grande (Río Grande)
  40. Sain Alto (Saín Alto)
  41. Sombrerete (Sombrerete)
  42. Susticacán (Susticacán)
  43. Tabasco (Tabasco)
  44. Tepechitlán (Tepechitlán)
  45. Tepetongo (Tepetongo)
  46. Teúl de González Ortega (Teú de González Ortega)
  47. Tlaltenango de Sánchez Román (Tlaltenango de Sánchez Román)
  48. Trancoso (Trancoso)
  49. Trinidad García de la Cadena (Trinidad García de la Cadena)
  50. Valparaíso (Valparaíso)
  51. Vetagrande (Vetagrande)
  52. Villa de Cos (Villa de Cos)
  53. Villa García (Villa García)
  54. Villa González Ortega (Villa González Ortega)
  55. Villa Hidalgo (Villa Hidalgo)
  56. Villanueva (Villanueva)
  57. Zacatecas (Zacatecas)

External links


This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Zacatecas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (531 words)
Zacatecas is one of the 31 constituent states of Mexico.
The state shares its name with its capital and chief center of population, the city of Zacatecas, Zacatecas.
The state of Zacatecas had an estimated 1,375,000 inhabitants in 2003.
Zacatecas state election, 2004 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (169 words)
The Mexican state of Zacatecas held an election on Sunday, 4 July 2004.
At stake was the office of the Zacatecas State Governor, all 30 members of the unicameral Zacatecas State Congress, and 57 mayors and municipal councils.
At 22h30, with results from 46% of the polling stations counted, the victory of Amalia García, with a 35,000 vote lead, seemed inevitable.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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